68 



HOW PLANTS ARE PROPAGATED. 



in some flowers very much like tiiise, as in Buttercups (Fig. 238) and Goldthread 

 Or the flower may be still more incomplete, and 



Naked, or Achlamydeous ; that is, without any flower-leaves at all, 



neither calyx nor corolla. That is the case in 



the Lizard's-Tail (Fig. 164), and in Willows. 



Or it may be incomplete by wanting either the 



stamens or the pistils ; then it is 



205. All Imperfect or Separated Flower. Of course, 



if the stamens are wanting in one kind of blos- 

 ,54 som tliere must be others that have them. Plants 



Pi„„.r of Li^ardvTaii. ^^.-^j^ ijjjpgrfect flowcrs accordingly bear two sorts 

 of blossoms, namely, one sort 



Staminate or Sterile, those having stamens only, and therefore not 

 producing seed ; and the other 



Pistillate or Fertile, having a pistil but no good sta- 

 mens, and ripening seed only when fertilized by pollen 

 from the sterile flowers. The Oak and Chestnut, Hemp, 

 Moonseed, and Indian Corn are so. Fig. 165 is one of 

 the staminate or sterile flowers of Indian Corn ; these 

 form the " tassel " at the top of the stem : their pollen 

 falls upon the " silk,'' or styles, of the forming ear below, 

 consisting of rows of pistillate flowers. Fig. 166 is one 

 of these, with its very long style. The two kinds of 

 flowers in this case are 



Moncecious ; that is, both borne by the same individ- 

 ual plant ; as they are also in the Oai, 

 Chestnut, Birch, &c. In othei' cases 



Dioecious ; that is, when one tree or herb 

 bears flowers with stamens only, and another 

 flowers with pistils only ; as in Willows and 

 Poplars, Hemp, and Moonseed. Fig. 167 is 

 a staminate flower from one plant of Moon- 

 seed, magnified; and Fig. 168, a pistillate flower, borne by a plant from a different 

 root. There is a tliird way : some plants produce what are called 



Polygamous flowers, that is, iiaving some blossoms with pistils only or with 



Moonssecl Flowers 



